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Wikipedia

Dominican Americans

Dominican Americans (Spanish: domínico-americanos,[3] estadounidenses dominicanos) are Americans who trace their ancestry to the Dominican Republic. The word may refer to someone born in the United States of Dominican descent or to someone who has migrated to the United States from the Dominican Republic. As of 2021, there were approximately 2.4 million people of Dominican descent in the United States, including both native and foreign-born.[1] They are the second largest Hispanic groups in the Northeastern region of the United States and the fifth-largest Latin American group, after Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Salvadorans and Cubans.

Dominican Americans
Dominican ancestry by state (2010)
Total population
2,393,718[1]
0.72% of the U.S. population (2021)[1][2]
Regions with significant populations
Majority concentrated in New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Florida, Pennsylvania and Connecticut
Languages
Spanish, English, Spanglish
Religion
Related ethnic groups
other Latin Americans, Spanish Americans

The first person of Dominican descent to migrate into what is now known as the United States was sailor-turned-merchant Juan Rodríguez who arrived on Manhattan in 1613 from his home in Santo Domingo.[4] Thousands of Dominicans also passed through the gates of Ellis Island in the 19th and early 20th centuries.[5] The most recent movement of emigration to the United States began in the 1960s, after the fall of the dictatorial Trujillo regime.

History

Since the establishment of the Spanish Empire, there have historically been immigrants from the former Captaincy General of Santo Domingo to other parts of New Spain which are now part of the United States, such as Florida, Louisiana and the Southwest. The first recorded person of Dominican descent to migrate into what is now known as the United States, outside of New Spain, was sailor-turned-merchant Juan Rodríguez. He arrived on Manhattan in 1613 from his home in Santo Domingo, which makes him the first non-Native American person to spend substantial time in the island. He also became the first Dominican, the first Hispanic and the first person with European (specifically Portuguese) and African ancestry to settle in what is present day New York City.[6]

20th century

Dominican emigration to the United States continued throughout the centuries. Recent studies from the CUNY Dominican studies Institute identified 5,000 Dominican nationals who were processed through Ellis Island between 1892 and 1924.[5]

During the 1930s and 40s, the flow of Dominicans to the United States fluctuated after Rafael Trujillo, who rose to power in 1930, imposed heavy restrictions on the outward migration of his citizens. Many of the 1,150 Dominicans immigrating to the United States between 1931 and 1940, came as secondary labor migrants from Cuba, Puerto Rico and Panama.[7]

A larger wave of Dominicans began after 1950, during a time when cracks began to appear in the Trujillo regime. Dominican immigrants during this period where largely classified as anti-Trujilo political exiles. During that decade, the United States admitted an average of 990 Dominican nationals per year.[7]

During the second half of the twentieth century there were three significant waves of immigration to the United States. The first period began in 1961, when a coalition of high-ranking Dominicans, with assistance from the CIA, assassinated General Rafael Trujillo, the nation's military dictator.[8] In the wake of his death, fear of retaliation by Trujillo's allies, and political uncertainty in general, spurred migration from the island. In 1965, the United States began a military occupation of the Dominican Republic and eased travel restrictions, making it easier for Dominicans to obtain American visas.[9]

From 1966 to 1978, the exodus continued, fueled by high unemployment and political repression. Communities established by the first wave of immigrants to the U.S. created a network that assisted subsequent arrivals. In the early 1980s, unemployment, inflation and the rise in value of the dollar all contributed to the third and largest wave of emigration from the island nation, this time mostly from the lower-class. Today, emigration from the Dominican Republic remains high, facilitated by the social networks of now-established Dominican communities in the United States.[10] Until about the early 2000s, the majority of immigration from the Dominican Republic came from the Cibao region and "La Capital" (Santo Domingo area). However now, Dominican immigrants are arriving to the United States from many parts of the country.[7]

Demographics

 
Juan Pablo Duarte memorial, Roger Williams Park, Providence, Rhode Island

Almost half of all the Dominican Americans today arrived since the 1990s, especially in the early part of that decade. There has been another surge of immigration in recent years as immigration from Mexico has declined, which allowed more backlogged Dominican applicants to obtain legal residence. Dominican Americans are the fifth-largest Hispanic American group, after Mexican Americans, Stateside Puerto Ricans, Cuban Americans and Salvadoran Americans.[11]

As of 2017, the majority of Dominican Americans are in a handful of states, including New York (872,504; 4.4% of state population), New Jersey (301,655; 3.3%), Florida (259,799; 1.2%), Massachusetts (172,707; 2.5%), Pennsylvania (127,665; 1.0%), Rhode Island (52,100; 5.1%) and Connecticut (40,543; 1.1%). Around 47% of Dominican Americans live in New York state with 41% in New York City alone; close to 40% of all Dominicans in the city live in the Bronx. Rhode Island has the highest percentage of Dominicans in the country and it is the only state where Dominicans are the largest Latino group.[12][13] Dominicans are the most dominant Latino group in most of southeastern New England (Rhode Island and eastern Massachusetts). Dominicans are also becoming more dominant in many areas in North Jersey and the Lower Hudson Valley, including the northern portion of the New York City area like the Bronx and Westchester. In New York City, the borough of Manhattan (New York County) is the only county in the country where Dominicans are the largest ancestral group and its Washington Heights neighborhood has long been considered the center of the Dominican American community.[13] The 2010 Census estimated the nationwide Dominican American population at 1,414,703.[12]

About 41% of Dominican Americans live in New York City alone. Many of New York's Dominicans live in the boroughs of the Bronx and Manhattan, and to a lesser degree in Queens and Brooklyn. There are also small populations in other parts of New York State, like Long Island in towns like Uniondale, Freeport and Brentwood being engulfed by the Salvadoran population, and the Hudson Valley including cities like Yonkers, Haverstraw, Sleepy Hollow and Newburgh. A rapidly growing population of up to 250,000 Dominicans reside across the Hudson River in New Jersey, topped by Paterson in absolute number and with Perth Amboy having the highest proportion in the U.S., alongside other areas of New Jersey, including cities like Jersey City, Union City (even though Union City is mostly Cuban desent) and Newark and many other areas in Passaic County and Hudson County.[14] In Massachusetts, there is a very large Dominican population throughout the eastern part of the state, especially Boston, Lawrence, Lynn, Salem and many other parts of the Boston area. Lawrence in particular has one of the highest percentages of Dominicans in the nation alongside Perth Amboy, New Jersey; Haverstraw, New York; and Hazleton, Pennsylvania. In Rhode Island, there is a large Dominican population throughout the state, especially Providence County, including the cities of Providence and Pawtucket. To a lesser extent, Connecticut has small Dominican populations in Fairfield County and New Haven County, including the cities of Waterbury, Danbury, Bridgeport and Stamford. In Pennsylvania, there are sizeable Dominican populations in the eastern portion of the state, including Philadelphia, Hazleton, Bethlehem, Allentown and Reading. Hazleton in Pennsylvania has one of the fastest growing Dominican communities in the nation, going from 1% in the 2000 census to about 35% according to the 2017 estimate.[15] There are also large Dominican populations in Florida, including in Miami, Pembroke Pines, Orlando, Kissimmee, Tampa and many other parts of the Miami and Orlando metropolitan areas. There are also much smaller but growing Dominican populations in New Hampshire, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Ohio, Texas and California, as well as the U.S. territories of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, in the former of which Dominicans make up the majority of recent immigrants.

Since 2010, there has been huge increases in the Dominican population in New York City (especially the Bronx), but also significant increases in Boston, Philadelphia, Miami, Orlando and many smaller cities throughout the coastal Northeast. According to 2014 estimates, Boston and New York City are the only major cities where Dominicans are now the largest Latino group, recently surpassing Puerto Ricans in both cities, due to slower growth (Boston) or decline (New York City) of the Puerto Rican populations in those cities and much faster growing Dominican populations.[16][17] However, in both cities, Dominicans make up only a plurality of the Latino population.[18] As of 2017, the New York City Area, which includes southern New York state and North Jersey, has nearly 1.1 million Dominicans, making up about 5.3% of the New York metro area and nearly 60% of the Dominican American community, the highest percentage of any metropolitan area. However, even though Dominicans are now the largest Latino group in New York City itself, Dominicans are still second in size to Puerto Ricans in the New York metropolitan area as a whole. The Boston metropolitan area is the only major metropolitan area where Dominicans are the largest Hispanic group, recently surpassing Puerto Ricans.[15] The Providence area also has a huge Dominican-dominant Latino community.[19]

New York City

 
Dominicans in New York Dominican day parade.

New York City has had a large Dominican community since as early as the 1960s.[20] However, the community did not start to boom until the 1980s.[21] Since then, Washington Heights in Upper Manhattan has remained the center of the Dominican American community, often nicknamed "Little Santo Domingo".[22][23] The eastern portions of Washington Heights and Inwood, as well as many western areas of the Bronx, such as Highbridge, University Heights, among others, have some of the largest urban concentration of Dominicans in the US.[20][21][23][24]

Many other areas, like Cypress Hills and Bushwick in Brooklyn and Corona, Queens have strong Dominican populations.[21] Despite strong segregation, Dominicans can be seen in many different neighborhoods throughout New York. New York City, as of 2017, has nearly 800,000 Dominicans, over half of them in the Bronx and Manhattan.[25] New York Dominicans usually share communities with other Latinos, particularly Puerto Ricans and other Latinos from Mexico and South/Central America, African Americans, West Indian/African immigrants, and caucasian. Dominicans recently became the city's largest Latino population, dethroning the older longstanding Puerto Rican population, they now make up 9% of New York City and nearly 35% of New York Latinos.[25] Dominicans have strong and growing influential clout and political power in the New York City area.[26]

Geographic distribution

State Dominican
Population
(2010 Census)[27]
Percentage US Census Estimate
(2017)[28]
Percentage
(2017)
US Census Estimate
(2021)[29]
Percentage
(2021)
  Alabama 852 0.0% 1,347 0.0% 2,050 0.0%
  Alaska 1,909 0.3% 1,971 0.3% 2,194 0.3%
  Arizona 3,103 0.0% 3,736 0.1% 7,582 0.1%
  Arkansas 384 0.0% 193 0.0% 742 0.0%
  California 11,455 0.0% 19,081 0.1% 29,277 0.1%
  Colorado 1,744 0.0% 4,070 0.1% 4,133 0.1%
  Connecticut 26,093 0.7% 40,543 1.1% 67,320 1.9%
  Delaware 2,035 0.2% 4,472 0.4% 5,821 0.6%
  District of Columbia 2,508 0.4% 4,644 0.5% 9,251 1.3%
  Florida 172,451 0.9% 259,779 1.2% 294,560 1.4%
  Georgia 14,941 0.2% 29,114 0.3% 25,952 0.2%
  Hawaii 600 0.0% 1,843 0.1% 3,955 0.3%
  Idaho 185 0.0% 307 0.0% 965 0.1%
  Illinois 5,691 0.0% 12,011 0.1% 9,344 0.1%
  Indiana 2,340 0.0% 4,663 0.1% 3,896 0.1%
  Iowa 429 0.0% 689 0.0% 836 0.0%
  Kansas 764 0.0% 1,283 0.1% 2,286 0.1%
  Kentucky 1,065 0.0% 1,392 0.0% 1,887 0.0%
  Louisiana 3,238 0.1% 5,782 0.1% 8,030 0.2%
  Maine 610 0.0% 952 0.1% 879 0.1%
  Maryland 14,873 0.3% 25,069 0.4% 28,569 0.5%
  Massachusetts 103,292 1.6% 172,707 2.5% 197,739 2.8%
  Michigan 5,012 0.1% 6,990 0.1% 9,498 0.1%
  Minnesota 1,294 0.0% 2,667 0.1% 5,771 0.1%
  Mississippi 733 0.0% 2,824 0.1% 1,260 0.0%
  Missouri 1,503 0.0% 2,520 0.0% 2,961 0.1%
  Montana 95 0.0% 274 0.0% 498 0.1%
  Nebraska 353 0.0% 485 0.0% 1,373 0.1%
  Nevada 2,446 0.1% 4,005 0.2% 4,158 0.1%
  New Hampshire 4,460 0.3% 8,323 0.6% 11,621 0.8%
  New Jersey 197,922 2.3% 301,655 3.4% 349,281 3.8%
  New Mexico 492 0.0% 1,138 0.1% 5,866 0.3%
  New York 674,787 3.5% 872,504 4.4% 935,759 4.7%
  North Carolina 15,225 0.2% 20,787 0.2% 30,757 0.3%
  North Dakota 90 0.0% 429 0.0% 486 0.1%
  Ohio 6,453 0.1% 16,143 0.1% 13,085 0.1%
  Oklahoma 727 0.0% 1,303 0.0% 1,273 0.0%
  Oregon 574 0.0% 678 0.0% 2,942 0.1%
  Pennsylvania 62,348 0.5% 127,665 1.0% 181,156 1.4%
  Rhode Island 35,008 3.3% 52,100 5.1% 56,059 5.1%
  South Carolina 3,018 0.1% 3,675 0.1% 5,326 0.1%
  South Dakota 79 0.0% 311 0.0% 559 0.1%
  Tennessee 2,113 0.0% 4,740 0.1% 5,432 0.1%
  Texas 13,353 0.1% 28,648 0.1% 32,940 0.1%
  Utah 1,252 0.0% 1,412 0.1% 5,326 0.2%
  Vermont 282 0.0% 328 0.0% 519 0.1%
  Virginia 10,504 0.1% 17,019 0.2% 18,373 0.2%
  Washington 1,819 0.0% 3,544 0.1% 4,999 0.1%
  West Virginia 363 0.0% 449 0.0% 548 0.0%
  Wisconsin 1,786 0.0% 3,078 0.1% 3,932 0.1%
  Wyoming 45 0.0% 85 0.0% 106 0.0%
Total U.S. Dominican population 1,414,703 0.5% 2,081,419 0.6% 2,393,718 0.7%

The largest populations of Dominicans are in the following metropolitan areas, according to the 2010 census:[30]

  1. New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA MSA - 835,402
  2. Boston-Worcester-Providence CSA - 128,183
  3. Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, FL MSA - 95,966
  4. Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL MSA - 35,486
  5. Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD MSA - 28,276
  6. Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV MSA - 17,750
  7. Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL MSA - 17,639
  8. Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA-NJ MSA - 13,081
  9. Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA MSA - 12,155

As of the 2010 census, the top 25 U.S. communities with the largest Dominican populations are the following:[30]

  1. New York City, New York – 576,701
  2. Lawrence, Massachusetts – 30,243
  3. Paterson, New Jersey – 27,426
  4. Boston, Massachusetts – 25,641
  5. Providence, Rhode Island – 25,267
  6. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – 15,963
  7. Yonkers, New York – 15,903
  8. Perth Amboy, New Jersey – 14,773
  9. Jersey City, New Jersey – 13,512
  10. Newark, New Jersey – 12,527
  11. Passaic, New Jersey – 12,340
  12. Holyoke, Massachusetts – 10,020
  13. Miami, Florida – 9,668
  14. Allentown, Pennsylvania – 9,340
  15. Reading, Pennsylvania – 8,716
  16. Elizabeth, New Jersey – 7,073
  17. Freeport, New York – 5,539
  18. Hazleton, Pennsylvania – 5,327
  19. West New York, New Jersey – 4,935
  20. Pembroke Pines, Florida – 4,804
  21. Clifton, New Jersey – 4,561
  22. Miramar, Florida – 4,529
  23. Orlando, Florida – 4,278
  24. Worcester, Massachusetts – 4,221
  25. Haverstraw, New York – 3,847

As of the 2010 census, the top 10 U.S. communities with the highest percentages of people claiming Dominican ancestry are the following:[31][30][32]

  1. Lawrence, Massachusetts – 47.0%
  2. Hazleton, Pennsylvania – 35.0%
  3. Haverstraw, New York – 32.4%
  4. Perth Amboy, New Jersey – 29.1%
  5. Paterson, New Jersey – 18.9%
  6. Sleepy Hollow, New York – 18.7%
  7. Passaic, New Jersey – 17.8%
  8. The Bronx, New York – 17.4%
  9. Providence, Rhode Island – 17.1%
  10. Union City, New Jersey – 15.2%

Race and identity

Since 1980, the Census Bureau has asked U.S. residents to classify their race separately from their Latino origin, if any.

In 2010, 29.6% of Dominican Americans responded that they were white, while 12.9% considered themselves black. A majority of 57.5% chose the category 'Other race'.[12]

 
Dominican NYPD officers in the Dominican day parade, New York.

The prevalence of the 'other race' category probably reflects the large number of people who identify as mixed African and Spaniard ancestry in the Dominican Republic, where 73% of the population identified as being of mixed Spaniard and African descent, commonly known as mulatto, similar to other Caribbean Latinos.[33][34][35] Genetically, some are tri-racial, however, having also Taíno Native American ancestry. Taíno ancestry among Dominicans usually hovers about 10% on average. With African ancestry hovering between 30 and 45% on average, and Spaniard ancestry hovering between 45 and 60%. Spaniard ancestry tends to be strongest in the interior Cibao region, while African is strongest in the southeast plain.[36]

According to the 2013 Pew Research Center survey there is an estimation about 1.8 million of Dominican origin that are residing in the United States which account for 3.3% of the US Latino population in 2013. When they were asked to identify themselves about 66% of them said they used the term 'Dominican', 16% use 'Americans', and 17% use the terms 'Hispanic' or 'Latino'. Those that prefer the term Hispanic is 29%, 11% prefer the term 'Latino', and the rest have no preference for either of the terms 'Latino' and Hispanic. When they were asked if they believed to be American about 53% did see themselves as American, 49% Latino adults were more likely to see themselves as typical American than the 44% that saw themselves different from the typical American. More than 55% of Dominican Americans are foreign-born.[37]

Dominican Americans have a Latin Caribbean culture similar to Puerto Ricans and Cubans, they also have very high intermarriage and procreation rates with Puerto Ricans.[38] The intermarriage of Dominicans with partners of other ethnicities sometimes creates circumstances that, depending on the dominant ethnic presence in the environment surrounding the family, may lead the children to identify with the ancestry of one of their parents rather than the other. Poet Sandra Maria Esteves has identified mainly with the ethnicity of her Puerto Rican father rather than that of her Dominican mother.[39]

In contrast to Puerto Ricans who have high overall intermarriage rates with non Latinos, Dominican Americans have the lowest intermarriage and reproduction rates of all major Latino groups with populations over 500,000. Majority of Dominican Americans marry and create families with other Dominican Americans, smaller numbers with other Latinos primarily Puerto Ricans as stated earlier. Only 2.8% of marriages involving a Dominican American are with a non-Latino partner.[citation needed]

Cities with the highest percentages of Dominicans are usually smaller cities that are 40% Latino or higher, with large Dominican populations and many times larger numbers of other Latino groups as well, including Providence, Rhode Island; Allentown, Pennsylvania; Lawrence, Massachusetts; and Paterson, New Jersey, among others. Among neighborhoods in larger cities like New York City, Dominicans usually settle in neighborhoods that are majority Latino, like Washington Heights, Bushwick, Jackson Heights, and many areas of the Bronx. The South Bronx, west of the Bronx river and south of Fordham Road, is around 70% Latino, a majority of which is Dominicans and Puerto Ricans.[12]

Dominican Americans tend to be heavily focused on issues in Dominican Republic, rather than that of the United States, with many having intentions of returning. It is normal in the Dominican American community to work in the United States and later invest the money in a house and business back in Dominican Republic. Dominican American investments are a major contribution to the economy of the Dominican Republic.[40] A large portion of Dominican immigrants and Dominican Americans engage in circular migration, in which they would live the early years working in the United States to retire the later years in Dominican Republic, or frequently relocate between homes in the United States and the Dominican Republic, oftentimes a home of a family member.

Race by Latino Origin Group[12][41][42]
U.S. Census Bureau White Black/African American Asian; American Indian and Alaska Native; Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander Some Other Race Two or More Races (Multiracial)
1990 29.3% 24.6% 0.5% 44.8%
2000 22.7% 8.9% 1.1% 58.4% 9.0%
2010 29.6% 12.9% 1.8% 46.0% 9.7%
 
The Dominican Day Parade in New York City, a major destination for Dominican emigrants.
 
Paterson, New Jersey, known as the "Silk City"[43] in the New York City Metropolitan Area, has become a prime destination for one of the fastest-growing communities of Dominican Americans, who have now become the largest of more than 50 ethnic groups in the city, numbering in the tens of thousands.[44]
 
A Dominican American grocery store.

Socioeconomics

A significant number of Dominican Americans are young, first-generation immigrants without a higher education, since many have roots in the country's rural areas. Second-generation Dominican Americans are more educated than their first-generation counterparts, a condition reflected in their higher incomes and employment in professional or skilled occupations[45] and more of them pursuing undergraduate education and graduate degrees.

Over 21% of all second-generation Dominican Americans have college degrees, slightly below the average for all Americans (24%) but significantly higher than US-born Mexican Americans (14%) and Stateside Puerto Rican (9%).[45] In New York City, Dominican entrepreneurs have carved out roles in several industries, especially the bodega and supermarket and taxi and black car industries.[46]

Political participation

 
Tom Perez served as chairman of the Democratic party from 2017 to 2021.

Over two dozen Dominican Americans are elected local or state legislators, mayors or other in New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Maryland, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania.[47] Dr. Eduardo J. Sanchez was the Commissioner of Health for the state of Texas from 2001 to 2006,[48] and Lorraine Cortés-Vázquez, of Puerto Rican and Dominican descent, held her post as New York Secretary of State from 2007 to 2010.[49][50] In November 2016, Adriano Espaillat became the first Dominican American to be elected to the United States Congress, he represents New York's 13th Congressional District which is predominantly Dominican American. He also became the first formerly undocumented American to be elected to Congress.

 
Angel Taveras, first Hispanic mayor of Providence, Rhode Island

The electoral participation of Dominicans in the United States may improve as a result of the 1994 approval of dual citizenship by the Dominican legislature, which makes it easier for migrants to become U.S. citizens without relinquishing their Dominican nationality. A 1997 Dominican law, which took effect in 2004, allows Dominicans living abroad to retain their Dominican citizenship and voting rights even if they become citizens of another country.[citation needed]

Traditionally, Dominicans living in the United States are passionately involved in politics "back home", but unlike other Latino national groups, such as Cuban Americans and Mexican Americans, they are not as inclined to take an active part in U.S. politics, but recent research has shown an increasing involvement in this area.[51]

Dominican Americans tend to vote for the Democratic Party. In 2020, Joe Biden carried Dominican American voters with 64% support to Trump's 33%, according to voter surveys conducted by the Associated Press.[52] Biden won Dominican American neighborhoods of New York City 85%-15%, according to a post-election New York Times analysis of precincts.[53]

Culture and notable people

Arts and literature

Junot Diaz drew on his life and the Dominican American experience generally in authoring Drown and The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, the latter of which won him the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2008 and made him the first Dominican American and the second Latino American in history to win the Pulitzer Prize.[54][55] Julia Alvarez is the nationally recognized author of In the Time of the Butterflies, a fictional book based on the lives of the Mirabal sisters, and How the García Girls Lost Their Accents.[56] Nelly Rosario, born in the Dominican Republic and raised in New York City, also won critical acclaim for her debut novel Song of the Water Saints.[57]

Héctor Rivera was a Dominican poet who lived in New York.[58] He was born in Yamasá, República Dominicana in 1957 and died from cancer in July 2005.[58] He lived during the diaspora, in which Dominican authors wrote about nostalgia that Dominican immigrants experienced in New York.[58] Some of his works include: "Los emigrantes del siglo", Poemas no comunes para matar la muerte, and Biografía del silencio.[58]

Another Dominican American writer and poet, Elizabeth Acevedo, was born in New York City.[59] She is the winner 2018 National Book Award for Young People's Literature, the Boston Globe-Hornbook Award Prize for Best Children's Fiction, and the Pura Belpré Award.[59] She also won the National Poetry Slam Competition.[59] She received her bachelor's degree at The George Washington University in performing arts, and she received her MFA in creative writing at the University of Maryland.[59] Some of her works include Beastgirl & Other Origin Myths, The Poet X, With The Fire On High, "Afro-Latina" and "Hair".

Business

Dominican Americans have increasingly made a presence in the financial industry. Cid Wilson was ranked #1 Wall Street financial analyst in the Specialty Retailing category by Forbes in 2006.[60][61] On July 14, 2014, he was named President & CEO of the Hispanic Association on Corporate Responsibility (HACR) in Washington, DC, thus becoming the first Afro-Latino to lead a major national Latino organization in the U.S.[62]

Julio A. Portalatin, chairman and CEO of Mercer LLC (subsidiary of Marsh & McLennan Companies), is the highest ranking Dominican American Fortune 500 executive in the U.S.[63]

Cuisine

Traditional Dominican cuisine has translated well to the United States as Dominican Americans have opened reputable restaurants throughout the diasporic communities. Traditional cuisine is very colorful with red and green peppers and cilantro. Traditional cuisine consists of rice, beans, tostones (known as fritos), and a meat like chicharrón de pollo (deep-fried chicken), mangú (mashed green plantains served with sautéed onion), slices of avocado, fried eggs, salami, empanadas and pastelitos (fried meat pies), and sancocho (stew of meats and root vegetables).[64]

The most well known drink is "Morir Soñando" which translates to "die dreaming". It is a drink of orange juice, cream and vanilla. Desserts include flan, bread pudding, rice pudding and tres leches. Dominican restaurant owners in the diasporic community really aim to conserve the taste of the mainland as they feel that is what immigrants seek out when looking for authentic Dominican cuisine.

Achieving that taste is not hard in the United States as most grocery stores stock Dominican, Puerto Rican and other Latin American products made by Goya Foods. Dominican Americans take pride in their food from their homeland and they use it as a symbol in times of celebration. For example, when the Dominican Republic won the World Cup of Baseball, Dominican Americans cheered carrying plantains.[65]

The experience of Dominican American cuisine goes beyond the consumption of the food, however. It is vitally integrated into the everyday culture of the Dominican American community. Through the sensations of eating, to the act of cooking, Dominican American food is part of the Dominican American experience.[66]

Religion

The vast majority of Dominicans adhere to Christianity, with most being Roman Catholic and many others being Protestant. Some Dominican Americans are non-religious, while a few others practice African diasporic religions like Dominican Vudú. It is estimated that 59% of Dominican Americans are Catholic, 21% are Protestant, together Christianity makes up 80%. Another 16% are non-religious and 4% practice other religions.[37]

Language

The Dominican American community is split between those that only know Spanish and little to no English, and those that are fully bilingual in both languages.[67] Very few Dominican Americans speak English only and no Spanish, as preserving aspects of Dominican identity, including the Spanish language, is very important to Dominican Americans.[40] About 51% of Dominican Americans are Spanish-dominant, 5% are English-dominant, and 44% are fully bilingual. Dominicans who only speak English fluently usually come from families that been in the United States for many generations.[37] In many cities in the Northeast region, the Dominican dialect of Spanish is the most commonly heard. Spanish is spoken at home by 88% of Dominican American families, higher compared to 73% of the overall Latino community.[37]

Fashion and design

Designer Oscar de la Renta, born in the Dominican Republic, was one of the most recognized names in the fashion industry.[citation needed]

Film, stage, and television

 
Dominican actress Maria Montez in 1944.

Maria Montez was dubbed "The Queen of Technicolor" for the numerous Hollywood adventure films that she starred in the 1940s. Zoe Saldana, the female lead of the 2009 film Avatar, is an actress born in New Jersey to a Dominican father and a Puerto Rican mother. Michelle Rodriguez, born of a Dominican mother and a Puerto Rican father, is known for her roles on the television series Lost and the films The Fast and the Furious, S.W.A.T. and Resident Evil.

Judy Reyes, best known for her roles as Carla Espinosa on the medical comedy series Scrubs (2001-2009) and Zoila Diaz in the Lifetime comedy-drama series Devious Maids (2013-2016) is an actress born in The Bronx, New York to Dominican immigrants.[68]

Dania Ramirez is known for playing Callisto in X-Men: The Last Stand, Sadie in Quarantine, Alex on Entourage and Maya Herrera on Heroes. Merlin Santana was a New Yorker whose most notable role was as Romeo on The Steve Harvey Show. Carlos De La Mota, born in New York to Dominican parents and raised in La Vega, and José Guillermo Cortines are popular telenovela actors who often work stateside.

Claudette Lali is a former model turned actress also born in New York and raised in the Dominican Republic. Charytín is an actress, singer, dancer, and television host who has been a longtime fixture in the U.S. Latino media. Tina Aumont, Miguel A. Nuñez, Karen Olivo (a Tony Award winner), Victor Rasuk, Judy Reyes, Shalim Ortiz (son of Charytín) and Tristan Wilds also have Dominican origin.

Education

For Dominican Americans, there is a disparity between men and women in terms of access and ability to complete education.[citation needed]

Men complete more years of education than women. Dominican women, on the average, complete 8.3 while men complete 8.5 years of school, and over one third (36%) of these men and women immigrants do not speak English at all.[citation needed]

Government and politics

Also increasing is the Dominican American profile in government and politics. Milestones along the way have been marked, among others, by Guillermo Linares and Kay Palacios, the first Dominican Americans elected in the United States, as former New York City Council Member and former Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey city council respectively; Marcos Devers, the first Dominican American mayor in the U.S., who was appointed as Acting Mayor of Lawrence, Massachusetts; Passaic, New Jersey mayor Dr. Alex D. Blanco, the first Dominican American mayor ever elected in the United States;[69][70] The first person of Dominican descent elected anywhere in the U.S. was former New York assemblyman Arthur O. Eve, serving parts of Buffalo, New York from 1966 to 2002.[71]

The first Dominican American New York County Supreme Court Judge was Rolando T. Acosta; Camelia Valdes, the first Dominican American to become a head prosecutor or district attorney in U.S. history;[72][73] Adriano Espaillat and Grace Diaz, respectively the first Dominican American person and the first Dominican American woman to be elected to a state legislature in the United States; Juan Pichardo, Rhode Island State Senator, the first Dominican American to be elected State Senator in the United States.[74]

President Barack Obama made his first major Dominican American appointment on March 13, 2009, when he nominated Thomas E. Perez to be Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights.[75] Perez was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on October 6, 2009. Angel Taveras, mayor of Providence, Rhode Island, is the first Latino mayor of the city, the third elected, and the fourth serving Dominican American mayor in the United States.[76]

Medicine

 
Juan Manuel Taveras Rodríguez.

Sarah Loguen Fraser (1850–1933) was the first female doctor in the Dominican Republic. She obtained her medical degree from the State University of New York Upstate Medical University in 1876.[77][78] Fraser is believed to be only the fourth African-American woman to become a licensed physician at the time.[78] When she died in 1933, the Dominican Republic declared a nine-day period of national mourning with flags flown at half-mast. A small park[79] in Syracuse honors the Loguen family, while the Child Care Center at Upstate Medical University is named in Sarah's honor.[80]

Juan Manuel Taveras Rodríguez was a Professor Emeritus at Harvard Medical School and Radiologist-in-Chief Emeritus of the Massachusetts General Hospital. He is widely regarded as the father of the medical specialty of neuroradiology, having co-authored the first textbook of this specialty and founded both the American Society of Neuroradiology and its journal, of which he served for several years as editor.[citation needed]

Music

Dominican music includes above all merengue and bachata. Bachata, as well as reggaeton, are very popular among many Dominican Americans. Along with Bachata and Reggaeton, Dominican American youth also enjoy Dembow and Latin trap. To a lesser degree, house, salsa, rock, hip hop and other musical genres are also commonly enjoyed.

Some notables in the music industry include: bachata singers Romeo Santos Prince Royce and Leslie Grace, Fuego Merengue singer, Ralph Mercado, founder of RMM Records and music producer; Johnny Pacheco, singer, godfather of New York salsa; Karina Pasian, singer and pianist; Proyecto Uno, merengue hip-hop group; Anthony Romeo Santos, singer and songwriter; Rosanna Tavarez, Rita Indiana, singer and songwriter, singer and television host; Ivan Barias, music producer and songwriter.[81]

In September 2017, New York-based rapper Cardi B became the first person of Dominican descent to reach number one in the history of the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, since it was launched in 1958.[82]

American rapper Ice Spice, whose drill song Munch (Feelin' U) went viral in late 2022, tweets that she is Dominican and African American[83]

Sports

 
Dominican American baseball player Albert Pujols.

Dominican Americans have made great strides in the field of baseball, the community's favored sport. Alex Rodriguez, New York-born, is the most well-known Dominican American in this field. He was the highest-paid player in Major League Baseball (MLB), and one of the most famous athletes in the United States. The larger portion of MLB players of Dominican origin immigrated from the Dominican Republic, number in the hundreds, and count among them Robinson Canó, José Bautista, Rafael Soriano, David Ortiz, Albert Pujols, Edwin Encarnacion, Hanley Ramírez, Manny Ramírez, Bartolo Colón and Hall of Fame members Juan Marichal, Vladimir Guerrero and Pedro Martínez.

Some of them, including Manny (2004), Pujols (2007), Ortiz (2008), Canó (2012), Colón (2014), Hanley (2019), and Carlos Santana (2019) have obtained U.S. citizenship.[84][85] Dominican natives Felipe Alou and Tony Peña were managers and Omar Minaya is a general manager in (MLB). Basketball has seen the likes of Felipe López, Francisco Garcia and the father-son pair of Tito and Al Horford, all originally from the Dominican Republic, as well as Charlie Villanueva and 2015 NBA draft top pick Karl-Anthony Towns from the New York area. In the National Football League (NFL) there are Luis Castillo, Tutan Reyes and Dante Rosario.

Baseball is a lifestyle among many in the Dominican community, and most Dominican American MLB fans are split between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox. Basketball is also a popular sport among Dominicans.[citation needed]

Other

 
Porfirio Rubirosa, diplomatic and socialite who inspired the James Bond film character.

Among other notables of full or partial Dominican origins are Nancy Alvarez, sexologist and talk show host in Spanish-language media; Susie Castillo, Miss USA 2003; Mary Joe Fernández, a tennis player and television commentator; CNN columnist Geovanny Vicente, a community leader and political strategist in Washington, D.C.;[86][87] Providencia Paredes, an assistant and confidante to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; and Ilka Tanya Payan, an AIDS/HIV activist, actress and attorney.

See also

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Further reading

  • Buffington, Sean T. "Dominican Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 2, Gale, 2014, pp. 15–25. online
  • Aparicio, Ana. Dominican-Americans and the Politics of Empowerment (UP of Florida, 2009).
  • Guarnizo, Luis E. "Los Dominicanyorks: The making of a binational society." Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 533.1 (1994): 70-86 [ online].
  • Hernández, Ramona. The Mobility of Workers under Advanced Capitalism: Dominican Migration to the United States (Columbia UP, 2002).
  • Itzigsohn, José. Encountering American Faultlines: Race, Class, and Dominican Experience in Providence (Russell Sage Foundation, 2009), about Rhode Island.
  • Krohn-Hansen, Christian. Making New York Dominican: Small Business, Politics, and Everyday Life (U of Pennsylvania Press; 2013) 336 pages; Dominicans in New York City focusing on entrepreneurs in the bodegas, supermarkets, taxi and black car industries.
  • Lima, Alvaro, Mark Melnik, and Jeremy B. Thompson. "Imagine All the People: Dominican Immigrants in Boston." New Bostonian Series: 1–12; A comprehensive look at Dominican immigrants in Boston that includes statistics on population concentration of Dominican Americans throughout the city, historical information that informs immigration patterns, and contributions of Dominican Americans to local economies.
  • Sørensen, Ninna Nyberg. "Narrating Identity Across Dominican Worlds 1." Transnationalism from below (Routledge, 2017) pp. 241–269 online.
  • Torres-Saillant, Silvio, and Ramona Hernández. The Dominican Americans (Greenwood Press, 1998).

Primary sources

  • Cepeda, Raquel. Bird of Paradise: How I Became Latina Atria Books. 2013. ISBN 978-1-4516-3586-7. A personal exploration of Dominican American identity via family interviews, travel and genetic genealogy.

External links

  • Dominican American National Roundtable

dominican, americans, this, article, about, americans, dominican, republic, descent, americans, with, ancestry, from, commonwealth, dominica, dominica, spanish, domínico, americanos, estadounidenses, dominicanos, americans, trace, their, ancestry, dominican, r. This article is about Americans of Dominican Republic descent For Americans with ancestry from the Commonwealth of Dominica see Dominican Americans Dominica Dominican Americans Spanish dominico americanos 3 estadounidenses dominicanos are Americans who trace their ancestry to the Dominican Republic The word may refer to someone born in the United States of Dominican descent or to someone who has migrated to the United States from the Dominican Republic As of 2021 there were approximately 2 4 million people of Dominican descent in the United States including both native and foreign born 1 They are the second largest Hispanic groups in the Northeastern region of the United States and the fifth largest Latin American group after Mexicans Puerto Ricans Salvadorans and Cubans Dominican AmericansDominican ancestry by state 2010 Total population2 393 718 1 0 72 of the U S population 2021 1 2 Regions with significant populationsMajority concentrated in New York Massachusetts New Jersey Rhode Island Florida Pennsylvania and ConnecticutLanguagesSpanish English SpanglishReligionPredominantly Roman Catholicism Minorities practicing Protestantism African diasporic religionsRelated ethnic groupsother Latin Americans Spanish AmericansThe first person of Dominican descent to migrate into what is now known as the United States was sailor turned merchant Juan Rodriguez who arrived on Manhattan in 1613 from his home in Santo Domingo 4 Thousands of Dominicans also passed through the gates of Ellis Island in the 19th and early 20th centuries 5 The most recent movement of emigration to the United States began in the 1960s after the fall of the dictatorial Trujillo regime Contents 1 History 1 1 20th century 2 Demographics 2 1 New York City 2 2 Geographic distribution 3 Race and identity 4 Socioeconomics 5 Political participation 6 Culture and notable people 6 1 Arts and literature 6 2 Business 6 3 Cuisine 6 4 Religion 6 5 Language 6 6 Fashion and design 6 7 Film stage and television 6 8 Education 6 9 Government and politics 6 10 Medicine 6 11 Music 6 12 Sports 6 13 Other 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary sources 10 External linksHistory EditSince the establishment of the Spanish Empire there have historically been immigrants from the former Captaincy General of Santo Domingo to other parts of New Spain which are now part of the United States such as Florida Louisiana and the Southwest The first recorded person of Dominican descent to migrate into what is now known as the United States outside of New Spain was sailor turned merchant Juan Rodriguez He arrived on Manhattan in 1613 from his home in Santo Domingo which makes him the first non Native American person to spend substantial time in the island He also became the first Dominican the first Hispanic and the first person with European specifically Portuguese and African ancestry to settle in what is present day New York City 6 20th century Edit Dominican emigration to the United States continued throughout the centuries Recent studies from the CUNY Dominican studies Institute identified 5 000 Dominican nationals who were processed through Ellis Island between 1892 and 1924 5 During the 1930s and 40s the flow of Dominicans to the United States fluctuated after Rafael Trujillo who rose to power in 1930 imposed heavy restrictions on the outward migration of his citizens Many of the 1 150 Dominicans immigrating to the United States between 1931 and 1940 came as secondary labor migrants from Cuba Puerto Rico and Panama 7 A larger wave of Dominicans began after 1950 during a time when cracks began to appear in the Trujillo regime Dominican immigrants during this period where largely classified as anti Trujilo political exiles During that decade the United States admitted an average of 990 Dominican nationals per year 7 During the second half of the twentieth century there were three significant waves of immigration to the United States The first period began in 1961 when a coalition of high ranking Dominicans with assistance from the CIA assassinated General Rafael Trujillo the nation s military dictator 8 In the wake of his death fear of retaliation by Trujillo s allies and political uncertainty in general spurred migration from the island In 1965 the United States began a military occupation of the Dominican Republic and eased travel restrictions making it easier for Dominicans to obtain American visas 9 From 1966 to 1978 the exodus continued fueled by high unemployment and political repression Communities established by the first wave of immigrants to the U S created a network that assisted subsequent arrivals In the early 1980s unemployment inflation and the rise in value of the dollar all contributed to the third and largest wave of emigration from the island nation this time mostly from the lower class Today emigration from the Dominican Republic remains high facilitated by the social networks of now established Dominican communities in the United States 10 Until about the early 2000s the majority of immigration from the Dominican Republic came from the Cibao region and La Capital Santo Domingo area However now Dominican immigrants are arriving to the United States from many parts of the country 7 Demographics Edit Juan Pablo Duarte memorial Roger Williams Park Providence Rhode IslandAlmost half of all the Dominican Americans today arrived since the 1990s especially in the early part of that decade There has been another surge of immigration in recent years as immigration from Mexico has declined which allowed more backlogged Dominican applicants to obtain legal residence Dominican Americans are the fifth largest Hispanic American group after Mexican Americans Stateside Puerto Ricans Cuban Americans and Salvadoran Americans 11 As of 2017 the majority of Dominican Americans are in a handful of states including New York 872 504 4 4 of state population New Jersey 301 655 3 3 Florida 259 799 1 2 Massachusetts 172 707 2 5 Pennsylvania 127 665 1 0 Rhode Island 52 100 5 1 and Connecticut 40 543 1 1 Around 47 of Dominican Americans live in New York state with 41 in New York City alone close to 40 of all Dominicans in the city live in the Bronx Rhode Island has the highest percentage of Dominicans in the country and it is the only state where Dominicans are the largest Latino group 12 13 Dominicans are the most dominant Latino group in most of southeastern New England Rhode Island and eastern Massachusetts Dominicans are also becoming more dominant in many areas in North Jersey and the Lower Hudson Valley including the northern portion of the New York City area like the Bronx and Westchester In New York City the borough of Manhattan New York County is the only county in the country where Dominicans are the largest ancestral group and its Washington Heights neighborhood has long been considered the center of the Dominican American community 13 The 2010 Census estimated the nationwide Dominican American population at 1 414 703 12 About 41 of Dominican Americans live in New York City alone Many of New York s Dominicans live in the boroughs of the Bronx and Manhattan and to a lesser degree in Queens and Brooklyn There are also small populations in other parts of New York State like Long Island in towns like Uniondale Freeport and Brentwood being engulfed by the Salvadoran population and the Hudson Valley including cities like Yonkers Haverstraw Sleepy Hollow and Newburgh A rapidly growing population of up to 250 000 Dominicans reside across the Hudson River in New Jersey topped by Paterson in absolute number and with Perth Amboy having the highest proportion in the U S alongside other areas of New Jersey including cities like Jersey City Union City even though Union City is mostly Cuban desent and Newark and many other areas in Passaic County and Hudson County 14 In Massachusetts there is a very large Dominican population throughout the eastern part of the state especially Boston Lawrence Lynn Salem and many other parts of the Boston area Lawrence in particular has one of the highest percentages of Dominicans in the nation alongside Perth Amboy New Jersey Haverstraw New York and Hazleton Pennsylvania In Rhode Island there is a large Dominican population throughout the state especially Providence County including the cities of Providence and Pawtucket To a lesser extent Connecticut has small Dominican populations in Fairfield County and New Haven County including the cities of Waterbury Danbury Bridgeport and Stamford In Pennsylvania there are sizeable Dominican populations in the eastern portion of the state including Philadelphia Hazleton Bethlehem Allentown and Reading Hazleton in Pennsylvania has one of the fastest growing Dominican communities in the nation going from 1 in the 2000 census to about 35 according to the 2017 estimate 15 There are also large Dominican populations in Florida including in Miami Pembroke Pines Orlando Kissimmee Tampa and many other parts of the Miami and Orlando metropolitan areas There are also much smaller but growing Dominican populations in New Hampshire Delaware Maryland Virginia North Carolina Georgia Ohio Texas and California as well as the U S territories of Puerto Rico and the U S Virgin Islands in the former of which Dominicans make up the majority of recent immigrants Since 2010 there has been huge increases in the Dominican population in New York City especially the Bronx but also significant increases in Boston Philadelphia Miami Orlando and many smaller cities throughout the coastal Northeast According to 2014 estimates Boston and New York City are the only major cities where Dominicans are now the largest Latino group recently surpassing Puerto Ricans in both cities due to slower growth Boston or decline New York City of the Puerto Rican populations in those cities and much faster growing Dominican populations 16 17 However in both cities Dominicans make up only a plurality of the Latino population 18 As of 2017 the New York City Area which includes southern New York state and North Jersey has nearly 1 1 million Dominicans making up about 5 3 of the New York metro area and nearly 60 of the Dominican American community the highest percentage of any metropolitan area However even though Dominicans are now the largest Latino group in New York City itself Dominicans are still second in size to Puerto Ricans in the New York metropolitan area as a whole The Boston metropolitan area is the only major metropolitan area where Dominicans are the largest Hispanic group recently surpassing Puerto Ricans 15 The Providence area also has a huge Dominican dominant Latino community 19 New York City Edit Dominicans in New York Dominican day parade New York City has had a large Dominican community since as early as the 1960s 20 However the community did not start to boom until the 1980s 21 Since then Washington Heights in Upper Manhattan has remained the center of the Dominican American community often nicknamed Little Santo Domingo 22 23 The eastern portions of Washington Heights and Inwood as well as many western areas of the Bronx such as Highbridge University Heights among others have some of the largest urban concentration of Dominicans in the US 20 21 23 24 Many other areas like Cypress Hills and Bushwick in Brooklyn and Corona Queens have strong Dominican populations 21 Despite strong segregation Dominicans can be seen in many different neighborhoods throughout New York New York City as of 2017 has nearly 800 000 Dominicans over half of them in the Bronx and Manhattan 25 New York Dominicans usually share communities with other Latinos particularly Puerto Ricans and other Latinos from Mexico and South Central America African Americans West Indian African immigrants and caucasian Dominicans recently became the city s largest Latino population dethroning the older longstanding Puerto Rican population they now make up 9 of New York City and nearly 35 of New York Latinos 25 Dominicans have strong and growing influential clout and political power in the New York City area 26 Geographic distribution Edit State DominicanPopulation 2010 Census 27 Percentage US Census Estimate 2017 28 Percentage 2017 US Census Estimate 2021 29 Percentage 2021 Alabama 852 0 0 1 347 0 0 2 050 0 0 Alaska 1 909 0 3 1 971 0 3 2 194 0 3 Arizona 3 103 0 0 3 736 0 1 7 582 0 1 Arkansas 384 0 0 193 0 0 742 0 0 California 11 455 0 0 19 081 0 1 29 277 0 1 Colorado 1 744 0 0 4 070 0 1 4 133 0 1 Connecticut 26 093 0 7 40 543 1 1 67 320 1 9 Delaware 2 035 0 2 4 472 0 4 5 821 0 6 District of Columbia 2 508 0 4 4 644 0 5 9 251 1 3 Florida 172 451 0 9 259 779 1 2 294 560 1 4 Georgia 14 941 0 2 29 114 0 3 25 952 0 2 Hawaii 600 0 0 1 843 0 1 3 955 0 3 Idaho 185 0 0 307 0 0 965 0 1 Illinois 5 691 0 0 12 011 0 1 9 344 0 1 Indiana 2 340 0 0 4 663 0 1 3 896 0 1 Iowa 429 0 0 689 0 0 836 0 0 Kansas 764 0 0 1 283 0 1 2 286 0 1 Kentucky 1 065 0 0 1 392 0 0 1 887 0 0 Louisiana 3 238 0 1 5 782 0 1 8 030 0 2 Maine 610 0 0 952 0 1 879 0 1 Maryland 14 873 0 3 25 069 0 4 28 569 0 5 Massachusetts 103 292 1 6 172 707 2 5 197 739 2 8 Michigan 5 012 0 1 6 990 0 1 9 498 0 1 Minnesota 1 294 0 0 2 667 0 1 5 771 0 1 Mississippi 733 0 0 2 824 0 1 1 260 0 0 Missouri 1 503 0 0 2 520 0 0 2 961 0 1 Montana 95 0 0 274 0 0 498 0 1 Nebraska 353 0 0 485 0 0 1 373 0 1 Nevada 2 446 0 1 4 005 0 2 4 158 0 1 New Hampshire 4 460 0 3 8 323 0 6 11 621 0 8 New Jersey 197 922 2 3 301 655 3 4 349 281 3 8 New Mexico 492 0 0 1 138 0 1 5 866 0 3 New York 674 787 3 5 872 504 4 4 935 759 4 7 North Carolina 15 225 0 2 20 787 0 2 30 757 0 3 North Dakota 90 0 0 429 0 0 486 0 1 Ohio 6 453 0 1 16 143 0 1 13 085 0 1 Oklahoma 727 0 0 1 303 0 0 1 273 0 0 Oregon 574 0 0 678 0 0 2 942 0 1 Pennsylvania 62 348 0 5 127 665 1 0 181 156 1 4 Rhode Island 35 008 3 3 52 100 5 1 56 059 5 1 South Carolina 3 018 0 1 3 675 0 1 5 326 0 1 South Dakota 79 0 0 311 0 0 559 0 1 Tennessee 2 113 0 0 4 740 0 1 5 432 0 1 Texas 13 353 0 1 28 648 0 1 32 940 0 1 Utah 1 252 0 0 1 412 0 1 5 326 0 2 Vermont 282 0 0 328 0 0 519 0 1 Virginia 10 504 0 1 17 019 0 2 18 373 0 2 Washington 1 819 0 0 3 544 0 1 4 999 0 1 West Virginia 363 0 0 449 0 0 548 0 0 Wisconsin 1 786 0 0 3 078 0 1 3 932 0 1 Wyoming 45 0 0 85 0 0 106 0 0 Total U S Dominican population 1 414 703 0 5 2 081 419 0 6 2 393 718 0 7 The largest populations of Dominicans are in the following metropolitan areas according to the 2010 census 30 New York Northern New Jersey Long Island NY NJ PA MSA 835 402 Boston Worcester Providence CSA 128 183 Miami Fort Lauderdale Pompano Beach FL MSA 95 966 Orlando Kissimmee Sanford FL MSA 35 486 Philadelphia Camden Wilmington PA NJ DE MD MSA 28 276 Washington Arlington Alexandria DC VA MD WV MSA 17 750 Tampa St Petersburg Clearwater FL MSA 17 639 Allentown Bethlehem Easton PA NJ MSA 13 081 Atlanta Sandy Springs Marietta GA MSA 12 155As of the 2010 census the top 25 U S communities with the largest Dominican populations are the following 30 New York City New York 576 701 Lawrence Massachusetts 30 243 Paterson New Jersey 27 426 Boston Massachusetts 25 641 Providence Rhode Island 25 267 Philadelphia Pennsylvania 15 963 Yonkers New York 15 903 Perth Amboy New Jersey 14 773 Jersey City New Jersey 13 512 Newark New Jersey 12 527 Passaic New Jersey 12 340 Holyoke Massachusetts 10 020 Miami Florida 9 668 Allentown Pennsylvania 9 340 Reading Pennsylvania 8 716 Elizabeth New Jersey 7 073 Freeport New York 5 539 Hazleton Pennsylvania 5 327 West New York New Jersey 4 935 Pembroke Pines Florida 4 804 Clifton New Jersey 4 561 Miramar Florida 4 529 Orlando Florida 4 278 Worcester Massachusetts 4 221 Haverstraw New York 3 847As of the 2010 census the top 10 U S communities with the highest percentages of people claiming Dominican ancestry are the following 31 30 32 Lawrence Massachusetts 47 0 Hazleton Pennsylvania 35 0 Haverstraw New York 32 4 Perth Amboy New Jersey 29 1 Paterson New Jersey 18 9 Sleepy Hollow New York 18 7 Passaic New Jersey 17 8 The Bronx New York 17 4 Providence Rhode Island 17 1 Union City New Jersey 15 2 Race and identity EditSince 1980 the Census Bureau has asked U S residents to classify their race separately from their Latino origin if any In 2010 29 6 of Dominican Americans responded that they were white while 12 9 considered themselves black A majority of 57 5 chose the category Other race 12 Dominican NYPD officers in the Dominican day parade New York The prevalence of the other race category probably reflects the large number of people who identify as mixed African and Spaniard ancestry in the Dominican Republic where 73 of the population identified as being of mixed Spaniard and African descent commonly known as mulatto similar to other Caribbean Latinos 33 34 35 Genetically some are tri racial however having also Taino Native American ancestry Taino ancestry among Dominicans usually hovers about 10 on average With African ancestry hovering between 30 and 45 on average and Spaniard ancestry hovering between 45 and 60 Spaniard ancestry tends to be strongest in the interior Cibao region while African is strongest in the southeast plain 36 According to the 2013 Pew Research Center survey there is an estimation about 1 8 million of Dominican origin that are residing in the United States which account for 3 3 of the US Latino population in 2013 When they were asked to identify themselves about 66 of them said they used the term Dominican 16 use Americans and 17 use the terms Hispanic or Latino Those that prefer the term Hispanic is 29 11 prefer the term Latino and the rest have no preference for either of the terms Latino and Hispanic When they were asked if they believed to be American about 53 did see themselves as American 49 Latino adults were more likely to see themselves as typical American than the 44 that saw themselves different from the typical American More than 55 of Dominican Americans are foreign born 37 Dominican Americans have a Latin Caribbean culture similar to Puerto Ricans and Cubans they also have very high intermarriage and procreation rates with Puerto Ricans 38 The intermarriage of Dominicans with partners of other ethnicities sometimes creates circumstances that depending on the dominant ethnic presence in the environment surrounding the family may lead the children to identify with the ancestry of one of their parents rather than the other Poet Sandra Maria Esteves has identified mainly with the ethnicity of her Puerto Rican father rather than that of her Dominican mother 39 In contrast to Puerto Ricans who have high overall intermarriage rates with non Latinos Dominican Americans have the lowest intermarriage and reproduction rates of all major Latino groups with populations over 500 000 Majority of Dominican Americans marry and create families with other Dominican Americans smaller numbers with other Latinos primarily Puerto Ricans as stated earlier Only 2 8 of marriages involving a Dominican American are with a non Latino partner citation needed Cities with the highest percentages of Dominicans are usually smaller cities that are 40 Latino or higher with large Dominican populations and many times larger numbers of other Latino groups as well including Providence Rhode Island Allentown Pennsylvania Lawrence Massachusetts and Paterson New Jersey among others Among neighborhoods in larger cities like New York City Dominicans usually settle in neighborhoods that are majority Latino like Washington Heights Bushwick Jackson Heights and many areas of the Bronx The South Bronx west of the Bronx river and south of Fordham Road is around 70 Latino a majority of which is Dominicans and Puerto Ricans 12 Dominican Americans tend to be heavily focused on issues in Dominican Republic rather than that of the United States with many having intentions of returning It is normal in the Dominican American community to work in the United States and later invest the money in a house and business back in Dominican Republic Dominican American investments are a major contribution to the economy of the Dominican Republic 40 A large portion of Dominican immigrants and Dominican Americans engage in circular migration in which they would live the early years working in the United States to retire the later years in Dominican Republic or frequently relocate between homes in the United States and the Dominican Republic oftentimes a home of a family member Race by Latino Origin Group 12 41 42 U S Census Bureau White Black African American Asian American Indian and Alaska Native Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander Some Other Race Two or More Races Multiracial 1990 29 3 24 6 0 5 44 8 2000 22 7 8 9 1 1 58 4 9 0 2010 29 6 12 9 1 8 46 0 9 7 The Dominican Day Parade in New York City a major destination for Dominican emigrants Paterson New Jersey known as the Silk City 43 in the New York City Metropolitan Area has become a prime destination for one of the fastest growing communities of Dominican Americans who have now become the largest of more than 50 ethnic groups in the city numbering in the tens of thousands 44 A Dominican American grocery store Socioeconomics EditA significant number of Dominican Americans are young first generation immigrants without a higher education since many have roots in the country s rural areas Second generation Dominican Americans are more educated than their first generation counterparts a condition reflected in their higher incomes and employment in professional or skilled occupations 45 and more of them pursuing undergraduate education and graduate degrees Over 21 of all second generation Dominican Americans have college degrees slightly below the average for all Americans 24 but significantly higher than US born Mexican Americans 14 and Stateside Puerto Rican 9 45 In New York City Dominican entrepreneurs have carved out roles in several industries especially the bodega and supermarket and taxi and black car industries 46 Political participation Edit Tom Perez served as chairman of the Democratic party from 2017 to 2021 Over two dozen Dominican Americans are elected local or state legislators mayors or other in New York New Jersey Rhode Island Maryland Massachusetts and Pennsylvania 47 Dr Eduardo J Sanchez was the Commissioner of Health for the state of Texas from 2001 to 2006 48 and Lorraine Cortes Vazquez of Puerto Rican and Dominican descent held her post as New York Secretary of State from 2007 to 2010 49 50 In November 2016 Adriano Espaillat became the first Dominican American to be elected to the United States Congress he represents New York s 13th Congressional District which is predominantly Dominican American He also became the first formerly undocumented American to be elected to Congress Angel Taveras first Hispanic mayor of Providence Rhode IslandThe electoral participation of Dominicans in the United States may improve as a result of the 1994 approval of dual citizenship by the Dominican legislature which makes it easier for migrants to become U S citizens without relinquishing their Dominican nationality A 1997 Dominican law which took effect in 2004 allows Dominicans living abroad to retain their Dominican citizenship and voting rights even if they become citizens of another country citation needed Traditionally Dominicans living in the United States are passionately involved in politics back home but unlike other Latino national groups such as Cuban Americans and Mexican Americans they are not as inclined to take an active part in U S politics but recent research has shown an increasing involvement in this area 51 Dominican Americans tend to vote for the Democratic Party In 2020 Joe Biden carried Dominican American voters with 64 support to Trump s 33 according to voter surveys conducted by the Associated Press 52 Biden won Dominican American neighborhoods of New York City 85 15 according to a post election New York Times analysis of precincts 53 Culture and notable people EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of Dominican Americans Dominican Republic Arts and literature Edit Junot Diaz drew on his life and the Dominican American experience generally in authoring Drown and The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao the latter of which won him the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2008 and made him the first Dominican American and the second Latino American in history to win the Pulitzer Prize 54 55 Julia Alvarez is the nationally recognized author of In the Time of the Butterflies a fictional book based on the lives of the Mirabal sisters and How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents 56 Nelly Rosario born in the Dominican Republic and raised in New York City also won critical acclaim for her debut novel Song of the Water Saints 57 Hector Rivera was a Dominican poet who lived in New York 58 He was born in Yamasa Republica Dominicana in 1957 and died from cancer in July 2005 58 He lived during the diaspora in which Dominican authors wrote about nostalgia that Dominican immigrants experienced in New York 58 Some of his works include Los emigrantes del siglo Poemas no comunes para matar la muerte and Biografia del silencio 58 Another Dominican American writer and poet Elizabeth Acevedo was born in New York City 59 She is the winner 2018 National Book Award for Young People s Literature the Boston Globe Hornbook Award Prize for Best Children s Fiction and the Pura Belpre Award 59 She also won the National Poetry Slam Competition 59 She received her bachelor s degree at The George Washington University in performing arts and she received her MFA in creative writing at the University of Maryland 59 Some of her works include Beastgirl amp Other Origin Myths The Poet X With The Fire On High Afro Latina and Hair Business Edit Dominican Americans have increasingly made a presence in the financial industry Cid Wilson was ranked 1 Wall Street financial analyst in the Specialty Retailing category by Forbes in 2006 60 61 On July 14 2014 he was named President amp CEO of the Hispanic Association on Corporate Responsibility HACR in Washington DC thus becoming the first Afro Latino to lead a major national Latino organization in the U S 62 Julio A Portalatin chairman and CEO of Mercer LLC subsidiary of Marsh amp McLennan Companies is the highest ranking Dominican American Fortune 500 executive in the U S 63 Cuisine Edit Traditional Dominican cuisine has translated well to the United States as Dominican Americans have opened reputable restaurants throughout the diasporic communities Traditional cuisine is very colorful with red and green peppers and cilantro Traditional cuisine consists of rice beans tostones known as fritos and a meat like chicharron de pollo deep fried chicken mangu mashed green plantains served with sauteed onion slices of avocado fried eggs salami empanadas and pastelitos fried meat pies and sancocho stew of meats and root vegetables 64 The most well known drink is Morir Sonando which translates to die dreaming It is a drink of orange juice cream and vanilla Desserts include flan bread pudding rice pudding and tres leches Dominican restaurant owners in the diasporic community really aim to conserve the taste of the mainland as they feel that is what immigrants seek out when looking for authentic Dominican cuisine Achieving that taste is not hard in the United States as most grocery stores stock Dominican Puerto Rican and other Latin American products made by Goya Foods Dominican Americans take pride in their food from their homeland and they use it as a symbol in times of celebration For example when the Dominican Republic won the World Cup of Baseball Dominican Americans cheered carrying plantains 65 The experience of Dominican American cuisine goes beyond the consumption of the food however It is vitally integrated into the everyday culture of the Dominican American community Through the sensations of eating to the act of cooking Dominican American food is part of the Dominican American experience 66 Religion Edit The vast majority of Dominicans adhere to Christianity with most being Roman Catholic and many others being Protestant Some Dominican Americans are non religious while a few others practice African diasporic religions like Dominican Vudu It is estimated that 59 of Dominican Americans are Catholic 21 are Protestant together Christianity makes up 80 Another 16 are non religious and 4 practice other religions 37 Language Edit The Dominican American community is split between those that only know Spanish and little to no English and those that are fully bilingual in both languages 67 Very few Dominican Americans speak English only and no Spanish as preserving aspects of Dominican identity including the Spanish language is very important to Dominican Americans 40 About 51 of Dominican Americans are Spanish dominant 5 are English dominant and 44 are fully bilingual Dominicans who only speak English fluently usually come from families that been in the United States for many generations 37 In many cities in the Northeast region the Dominican dialect of Spanish is the most commonly heard Spanish is spoken at home by 88 of Dominican American families higher compared to 73 of the overall Latino community 37 Fashion and design Edit Designer Oscar de la Renta born in the Dominican Republic was one of the most recognized names in the fashion industry citation needed Film stage and television Edit Dominican actress Maria Montez in 1944 Maria Montez was dubbed The Queen of Technicolor for the numerous Hollywood adventure films that she starred in the 1940s Zoe Saldana the female lead of the 2009 film Avatar is an actress born in New Jersey to a Dominican father and a Puerto Rican mother Michelle Rodriguez born of a Dominican mother and a Puerto Rican father is known for her roles on the television series Lost and the films The Fast and the Furious S W A T and Resident Evil Judy Reyes best known for her roles as Carla Espinosa on the medical comedy series Scrubs 2001 2009 and Zoila Diaz in the Lifetime comedy drama series Devious Maids 2013 2016 is an actress born in The Bronx New York to Dominican immigrants 68 Dania Ramirez is known for playing Callisto in X Men The Last Stand Sadie in Quarantine Alex on Entourage and Maya Herrera on Heroes Merlin Santana was a New Yorker whose most notable role was as Romeo on The Steve Harvey Show Carlos De La Mota born in New York to Dominican parents and raised in La Vega and Jose Guillermo Cortines are popular telenovela actors who often work stateside Claudette Lali is a former model turned actress also born in New York and raised in the Dominican Republic Charytin is an actress singer dancer and television host who has been a longtime fixture in the U S Latino media Tina Aumont Miguel A Nunez Karen Olivo a Tony Award winner Victor Rasuk Judy Reyes Shalim Ortiz son of Charytin and Tristan Wilds also have Dominican origin Education Edit For Dominican Americans there is a disparity between men and women in terms of access and ability to complete education citation needed Men complete more years of education than women Dominican women on the average complete 8 3 while men complete 8 5 years of school and over one third 36 of these men and women immigrants do not speak English at all citation needed Government and politics Edit Also increasing is the Dominican American profile in government and politics Milestones along the way have been marked among others by Guillermo Linares and Kay Palacios the first Dominican Americans elected in the United States as former New York City Council Member and former Englewood Cliffs New Jersey city council respectively Marcos Devers the first Dominican American mayor in the U S who was appointed as Acting Mayor of Lawrence Massachusetts Passaic New Jersey mayor Dr Alex D Blanco the first Dominican American mayor ever elected in the United States 69 70 The first person of Dominican descent elected anywhere in the U S was former New York assemblyman Arthur O Eve serving parts of Buffalo New York from 1966 to 2002 71 The first Dominican American New York County Supreme Court Judge was Rolando T Acosta Camelia Valdes the first Dominican American to become a head prosecutor or district attorney in U S history 72 73 Adriano Espaillat and Grace Diaz respectively the first Dominican American person and the first Dominican American woman to be elected to a state legislature in the United States Juan Pichardo Rhode Island State Senator the first Dominican American to be elected State Senator in the United States 74 President Barack Obama made his first major Dominican American appointment on March 13 2009 when he nominated Thomas E Perez to be Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights 75 Perez was confirmed by the U S Senate on October 6 2009 Angel Taveras mayor of Providence Rhode Island is the first Latino mayor of the city the third elected and the fourth serving Dominican American mayor in the United States 76 Medicine Edit Juan Manuel Taveras Rodriguez Sarah Loguen Fraser 1850 1933 was the first female doctor in the Dominican Republic She obtained her medical degree from the State University of New York Upstate Medical University in 1876 77 78 Fraser is believed to be only the fourth African American woman to become a licensed physician at the time 78 When she died in 1933 the Dominican Republic declared a nine day period of national mourning with flags flown at half mast A small park 79 in Syracuse honors the Loguen family while the Child Care Center at Upstate Medical University is named in Sarah s honor 80 Juan Manuel Taveras Rodriguez was a Professor Emeritus at Harvard Medical School and Radiologist in Chief Emeritus of the Massachusetts General Hospital He is widely regarded as the father of the medical specialty of neuroradiology having co authored the first textbook of this specialty and founded both the American Society of Neuroradiology and its journal of which he served for several years as editor citation needed Music Edit Dominican music includes above all merengue and bachata Bachata as well as reggaeton are very popular among many Dominican Americans Along with Bachata and Reggaeton Dominican American youth also enjoy Dembow and Latin trap To a lesser degree house salsa rock hip hop and other musical genres are also commonly enjoyed Some notables in the music industry include bachata singers Romeo Santos Prince Royce and Leslie Grace Fuego Merengue singer Ralph Mercado founder of RMM Records and music producer Johnny Pacheco singer godfather of New York salsa Karina Pasian singer and pianist Proyecto Uno merengue hip hop group Anthony Romeo Santos singer and songwriter Rosanna Tavarez Rita Indiana singer and songwriter singer and television host Ivan Barias music producer and songwriter 81 In September 2017 New York based rapper Cardi B became the first person of Dominican descent to reach number one in the history of the US Billboard Hot 100 chart since it was launched in 1958 82 American rapper Ice Spice whose drill song Munch Feelin U went viral in late 2022 tweets that she is Dominican and African American 83 Sports Edit Dominican American baseball player Albert Pujols Dominican Americans have made great strides in the field of baseball the community s favored sport Alex Rodriguez New York born is the most well known Dominican American in this field He was the highest paid player in Major League Baseball MLB and one of the most famous athletes in the United States The larger portion of MLB players of Dominican origin immigrated from the Dominican Republic number in the hundreds and count among them Robinson Cano Jose Bautista Rafael Soriano David Ortiz Albert Pujols Edwin Encarnacion Hanley Ramirez Manny Ramirez Bartolo Colon and Hall of Fame members Juan Marichal Vladimir Guerrero and Pedro Martinez Some of them including Manny 2004 Pujols 2007 Ortiz 2008 Cano 2012 Colon 2014 Hanley 2019 and Carlos Santana 2019 have obtained U S citizenship 84 85 Dominican natives Felipe Alou and Tony Pena were managers and Omar Minaya is a general manager in MLB Basketball has seen the likes of Felipe Lopez Francisco Garcia and the father son pair of Tito and Al Horford all originally from the Dominican Republic as well as Charlie Villanueva and 2015 NBA draft top pick Karl Anthony Towns from the New York area In the National Football League NFL there are Luis Castillo Tutan Reyes and Dante Rosario Baseball is a lifestyle among many in the Dominican community and most Dominican American MLB fans are split between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox Basketball is also a popular sport among Dominicans citation needed Other Edit Porfirio Rubirosa diplomatic and socialite who inspired the James Bond film character Among other notables of full or partial Dominican origins are Nancy Alvarez sexologist and talk show host in Spanish language media Susie Castillo Miss USA 2003 Mary Joe Fernandez a tennis player and television commentator CNN columnist Geovanny Vicente a community leader and political strategist in Washington D C 86 87 Providencia Paredes an assistant and confidante to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Ilka Tanya Payan an AIDS HIV activist actress and attorney See also Edit United States portal Hispanic and Latino Americans portal Dominican Republic portalDominican people Dominican Republic Demographics of the Dominican Republic Culture of the Dominican Republic Afro Dominicans Dominican Day Parade Dominican immigration to Puerto Rico Dominican Canadians Hispanic Americans Stateside Puerto Ricans Cuban Americans Haitian Americans West Indian Americans Spanish Caribbean Dominican Republic United States relations Black Hispanic and Latino Americans White Hispanic and Latino Americans Multiracial Americans Mexican Americans Spanish AmericansReferences Edit a b c Explore Census Data Retrieved October 17 2019 Explore Census Data La Liga de Oficiales Electos Dominico Americanos proponen soluciones a los altos precios del petroleo Archived January 13 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Roberts Sam October 2 2012 Local History Honoring a Very Early New Yorker The New York Times Retrieved January 14 2016 a b Preview of Research Findings October 22 Dominican Immigration Through Ellis Island CUNY Dominican Studies Institute News Cunydsi typepad com Archived from the original on March 19 2015 Retrieved March 17 2015 Juan Rodriguez Archives Voices of NY Voices of NY Retrieved March 17 2015 a b c Dominican immigrants Justice Department Memo 1975 PDF National Security Archive Morrison Thomas K Sinkin Richard 1982 International Migration in the Dominican Republic Implications for Development Planning International Migration Review 16 4 819 36 doi 10 2307 2546161 JSTOR 2546161 PMID 12265312 Social Studies In Action Migration From Latin America www learner org Archived from the original on September 13 2008 Retrieved May 20 2019 B03001 Hispanic or Latino Origin by Specific Origin 2009 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Retrieved December 1 2010 a b c d e Dominican Materials3 PDF United States Census Bureau p 14 a b 2010 Census Medgar Evers College Archived from the original on June 11 2010 Retrieved April 13 2010 N J city tops Dominican population in the U S census says DominicanToday com January 30 2009 Archived from the original on September 23 2015 Retrieved June 29 2015 a b American FactFinder Results Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved March 26 2019 Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS American FactFinder Results Factfinder census gov Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved March 17 2015 Dominicans now outnumber Puerto Ricans in NYC New York Post November 13 2014 Retrieved March 17 2015 NYC s Dominican population surpasses Puerto Rican community for first time Fox News Latino Retrieved March 17 2015 QT P10 Hispanic or Latino by Type 2010 Census Summary File 1 U S Census Bureau Retrieved January 22 2012 permanent dead link a b The New York Times March 18 2009 Answers About Dominicans in New York City Room blogs nytimes com The New York Times Company Retrieved April 22 2009 a b c Jimenez Randy Pete Dzierzynski 2001 Dominicans in Sunnyside and Woodside Voices of New York New York University Retrieved May 5 2009 Semple Kirk June 8 2013 Take the A Train to Little Guyana The New York Times Retrieved June 13 2015 a b Nguyen Pauline Josephine Sanchez 2001 Ethnic Communities in New York City Dominicans in Washington Heights Voices of New York NYU Retrieved May 5 2009 Foner Nancy 2001 New immigrants in New York 2nd illustrated revised ed Columbia University Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 231 12414 0 a b American FactFinder Results Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved September 25 2018 Renner James Washington Heights Columbia 250 Columbia University Retrieved April 22 2009 U S Census Bureau Table QT P10 Hispanic or Latino by Type 2010 Archived February 12 2020 at archive today American FactFinder Results Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Explore Census Data a b c Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS American FactFinder Results Factfinder census gov Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved March 17 2015 Ancestry Map of Dominican Communities Epodunk com Archived from the original on October 17 2010 Retrieved January 26 2008 Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS American FactFinder Results Factfinder census gov Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved March 17 2015 Fuente Encuesta Latin American Public Opinion Project LAPOP La variable etnico racial en los censos de poblacion en la Republica Dominicana in Spanish Oficina Nacional de Estadistica Archived from the original on July 29 2013 Torres Saillant Silvio 2010 Introduction to Dominican Blackness PDF City College of New York Dominican Studies Institute City University of New York Retrieved January 14 2016 Suarez Orozco Marcelo Paez Mariela eds 2002 Latinos Remaking America Berkeley University of California Press Montinaro Francesco et al March 24 2015 Unravelling the hidden ancestry of American admixed populations Nature Communications 6 See Supplementary Data Bibcode 2015NatCo 6 6596M doi 10 1038 ncomms7596 PMC 4374169 PMID 25803618 a b c d Hispanics of Dominican Origin in the United States 2013 September 15 2015 Hispanics of Dominican Origin in the United States 2013 Pew Research Center s Hispanic Trends Project September 15 2015 Retrieved May 23 2018 Torres Saillant Silvio Dominican American Literature In Suzanne Bost and Frances R Apapricio eds The Routledge Companion to Latino a Literature Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group 2015 pp 41 53 a b https dominicanosusa org en importance of connections to the homeland dead link Tafoya Sonya December 6 2004 Shades of Belonging PDF Pew Hispanic Center p 6 Archived from the original PDF on March 3 2016 Retrieved January 14 2016 Eduardo Bonilla Silva 2002 We are all Americans the Latin Americanization of racial stratification in the USA PDF Texas A amp M University pp 6 8 Retrieved January 14 2016 City of Paterson Silk City Retrieved April 2 2013 Valencia Laura September 8 2013 Thousands celebrate their heritage in Paterson s Dominican Parade North Jersey Media Group Retrieved September 9 2013 a b Castro Max J 2002 The Dominican Diaspora Revisited Dominicans and Dominican Americans in a New Century Christian Krohn Hansen Making New York Dominican Small Business Politics and Everyday Life University of Pennsylvania Press 2013 Elected Officials Dominican American National Roundtable Archived from the original on November 1 2010 Retrieved February 11 2010 Dr Eduardo Sanchez addresses DANR 8th Annual National Conference Archived from the original on July 29 2007 NY Sec of State Lorraine Cortes Vazquez to addresses DANR 11th Annual National Conference Archived from the original on January 15 2009 Lorraine Cortes Vazquez to Head AARP s New Multicultural Strategy aarp org July 29 2010 Castro Yahaira October 26 2004 FRONTLINE WORLD Election 2004 Dominican Republic PBS Retrieved June 9 2008 National Voter Surveys How Different Groups Voted The New York Times November 3 2020 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2022 Cai Weiyi Fessenden Ford December 21 2020 Immigrant Neighborhoods Shifted Red as the Country Chose Blue The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2022 DANR Congratulates Junot Diaz as first Dominican American To Win Pulitzer Prize Archived from the original on January 15 2009 Junot Diaz wins Pulitzer for Oscar Wao Archived from the original on April 14 2010 Julia Alvarez interview In the time of discovery The Writer August 4 2016 Retrieved March 5 2017 Rosario Nelly 2002 Amazon listing with reviews ISBN 0375420878 a b c d Letralia 127 Noticias Muere poeta dominicano Hector Rivera letralia com Retrieved April 19 2019 a b c d About Elizabeth Acevedo February 7 2018 Retrieved April 19 2019 DR 1 Daily News May 4 2006 Dr1 com Retrieved October 13 2017 The Best Analysts Earnings Estimators Forbes com Retrieved October 13 2017 Cid Wilson When we succeed we give back When we give back we succeed aldianews com Retrieved August 8 2018 Julio Portalatin Diversity Journal Profile diversityjournal com Retrieved January 12 2015 Stone John H Culture and disability Providing culturally competent services Vol 21 Sage Publications 2004 Health Culture and Cuisine in the Dominican American Community Personal interview March 27 2013 Marte Lidia Dominican Migrant Cooking Food Struggles Gendered Labor and Memory Work in New York City Food and Foodways 20 no 3 4 2012 279 306 Bailey Benjamin 2000 Language and negotiation of ethnic Racial identity among Dominican Americans Language in Society 29 4 555 582 doi 10 1017 S0047404500004036 S2CID 145066424 Hinojosa Maria Judy Reyes In Her Own Words wgbh org WGBH Retrieved May 11 2023 Coyne Kevin November 28 2008 Dominican Wins City Hall and a Community s Pride The New York Times retrieved May 22 2010 Pizarro Max June 30 2009 Corzine to swear in Blanco tomorrow with Menendez also in attendance PolitickerNJ Retrieved November 3 2009 First Dominican elected to public office in the United States of America to receive Lifetime Achievement Award Institute for Latino Studies Research amp Development DANR Congratulates Camelia Valdes As The First Dominican American In U S History To Head A Prosecutor s Office Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Valdes sworn in as New Jersey s first Latina Prosecutor Senator Juan M Pichardo State of Rhode Island General Assembly official site Archived from the original on June 24 2007 President Barack Obama nominates Tom Perez as Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights whitehouse gov Press release March 13 2009 via National Archives Smith Michelle R January 3 2011 New Providence Mayor Angel Taveras sworn in The Boston Globe Associated Press Retrieved January 3 2011 vd Luft E 2000 Sarah Loguen Fraser MD 1850 to 1933 the fourth African American woman physician Journal of the National Medical Association 92 3 149 153 ISSN 0027 9684 PMC 2640561 PMID 10745647 a b Sarah Loguen Fraser Determined to be a doctor February 17 2003 Friends of Loguen Park Association Loguen Park loguenparkassociation weebly com Locations Directions SUNY Upstate Medical University www upstate edu Ralph Mercado Impresario Dies at 67 The New York Times March 11 2009 Cardi B Becomes First Person of Dominican Descent to Reach No 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 Remezcla com September 25 2017 Retrieved October 13 2017 Ramos Dantee November 16 2022 Ice Spice Reveals She s Nigerian And Dominican After Fan Says She Looks So Igbo Yahoo News Archived from the original on March 3 2023 Retrieved January 25 2023 Colon wife become U S citizens Espn com September 30 2014 Retrieved October 13 2017 Bell Mandy April 5 2019 Santana Hanley pass U S citizenship test MLB com Retrieved April 11 2019 Meet Geovanny Vicente Romero Carlos Rosario Carlosrosario org July 29 2016 Retrieved October 13 2017 Leayman Emily Adult charter school helps immigrant thrive in U S Watchdog org Archived from the original on September 2 2017 Retrieved October 13 2017 Further reading EditBuffington Sean T Dominican Americans Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 2 Gale 2014 pp 15 25 online Aparicio Ana Dominican Americans and the Politics of Empowerment UP of Florida 2009 Guarnizo Luis E Los Dominicanyorks The making of a binational society Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 533 1 1994 70 86 online Hernandez Ramona The Mobility of Workers under Advanced Capitalism Dominican Migration to the United States Columbia UP 2002 Itzigsohn Jose Encountering American Faultlines Race Class and Dominican Experience in Providence Russell Sage Foundation 2009 about Rhode Island Krohn Hansen Christian Making New York Dominican Small Business Politics and Everyday Life U of Pennsylvania Press 2013 336 pages Dominicans in New York City focusing on entrepreneurs in the bodegas supermarkets taxi and black car industries Lima Alvaro Mark Melnik and Jeremy B Thompson Imagine All the People Dominican Immigrants in Boston New Bostonian Series 1 12 A comprehensive look at Dominican immigrants in Boston that includes statistics on population concentration of Dominican Americans throughout the city historical information that informs immigration patterns and contributions of Dominican Americans to local economies Sorensen Ninna Nyberg Narrating Identity Across Dominican Worlds 1 Transnationalism from below Routledge 2017 pp 241 269 online Torres Saillant Silvio and Ramona Hernandez The Dominican Americans Greenwood Press 1998 Primary sources Edit Cepeda Raquel Bird of Paradise How I Became Latina Atria Books 2013 ISBN 978 1 4516 3586 7 A personal exploration of Dominican American identity via family interviews travel and genetic genealogy Synopsis and ExcerptExternal links EditDominican American National Roundtable Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dominican Americans amp oldid 1165870453, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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